Multiple Arcade Machine Emulator
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| courtesy www.mame.net |
With time on his hands and a busted video console, Mr. S spent the time and effort to read the ROM firmware and emulate a 3 MHz 8080 microprocessor on a 300 MHz Pentium. Since many classic games ran on this or other early, well-documented microprocessors, the floodgates were open. Anyone with access to an old arcade video machine and some Electronics 101 skills can suck out the heart of these old machines, and buff it up to the point your 32 bit 16 gazillion color monitor can relive games originally written for 8 bit VGA displays. And it's all free and largely legal.
Almost. While the code is free, and many games are available for free download, there is one important legal requirement you need to know. You may only posses ROM file with copyrighted code if you actually own the original circuit cards, or a game cartridge that plays the same version. All the copyrighted characters, games, and so forth still belong to the original owner, and will well past your life time. Ink 19 urges you to obey all copy write laws. Read the legal stuff on the MAME Web site, and respect it.
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| courtesy www.mame.net |
This is really a fascinating site; whether you just want to show your children how hard things were when you were in high school, ("The snow was up to HERE when I had to walk to the mall!") or if you're a serious computer historian who want to help preserve a fading part of our digital heritage, MAME grabs the high ground of Fun Mountain. The MAME source code is freely available, has been ported to more operating systems than most people know about, and the MAME project is looking for skilled coders. And, unlike those of you who may be trying to crack FlexLM 7, no jail time is hanging over your head. Got another virtual quarter?
http://www.mame.net/
Carl F. Gauze



